Here is a soon-forthcoming collection on phenomenology and virtue ethics, perhaps the first in its area.

Book Description:The correlation between person and environment has long been a central focus of phenomenological analysis. While phenomenology is usually understood as a descriptive discipline showing how essential features of the human encounter with things and people in the world are articulated, phenomenology is also based on ethical concerns. Husserl himself, the founder of the movement, gave several lecture courses on ethics. The present volume focuses on one trend in ethics—virtue ethics—and its connection to phenomenology. The essays explore how phenomenology contributes to virtue ethics and clarifies some of the issues that are central to virtue ethics. This volume initiates a conversation with virtue ethicists that is underrepresented in the current literature.

Phenomenology and Virtue Ethics offers contributions from prominent phenomenologists who develop one or more of the following issues: how phenomenology is connected to the ancient Greek or Christian virtue tradition, how phenomenology and its foundational thinkers are oriented toward virtue ethics and how phenomenology is itself a virtue discipline. The volume's focus on phenomenology and virtue ethics is the first of its kind.